Younger Dryas and early Holocene lake-level fluctuations in the Jura mountains, France

Boreas ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 155-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
MICHEL MAGNY ◽  
PASCALE RUFFALDI
2019 ◽  
Vol 56 (8) ◽  
pp. 848-856
Author(s):  
Cyril Aubert ◽  
Morteza Djamali ◽  
Matthew Jones ◽  
Hamid Lahijani ◽  
Nick Marriner ◽  
...  

The late glacial – early Holocene transition is a key period in the earth’s history. However, although this transition is well studied in Europe, it is not well constrained in the Middle East and palaeohydrological records with robust chronologies remain scarce from this region. Here we present an interesting hydrobiological record showing a major environmental change occurring in the Dasht-e Arjan Wetland (southwestern Iran, near to Persepolis) during the late glacial – early Holocene transition (ca. 11 650 years cal BP). We use subfossil chironomids (Insecta: Diptera) as a proxy for hydrological changes and to reconstruct lake-level fluctuations. The Arjan wetland was a deep lake during the Younger Dryas marked by a dominance of Chironomus plumosus/anthracinus-type, taxa adapted to anoxic conditions of deep waters. At the beginning of the Holocene, a drastic decrease (more than 80% to less than 10%) of Chironomus plumosus/anthracinus-type, combined with diversification of littoral taxa such as Polypedilum nubeculosum-type, Dicrotendipes nervosus-type, and Glyptotendipes pallens-type, suggests a lake-level decrease and a more vegetalized aquatic environment. We compare and contrast the chironomid record of Arjan with a similar record from northwestern Iran. The palaeoclimatic significance of the record, at a local and regional scale, is subsequently discussed. The increase in Northern Hemisphere temperatures, inferred by geochemical data from NGRIP, at the beginning of the Holocene best explains the change from the Younger Dryas highstand to early Holocene lowstand conditions in the Dasht-e Arjan wetland. However, a contribution of the meltwater inflow from small local glaciers in the catchment basin is not excluded.


1994 ◽  
Vol 31 (11) ◽  
pp. 1586-1605 ◽  
Author(s):  
David K. Rea ◽  
Theodore C. Moore Jr. ◽  
C. F. Michael Lewis ◽  
Larry A. Mayer ◽  
David L. Dettman ◽  
...  

Seismic reflection profiling and piston coring identified seismic reflectors in northern Lake Huron and Georgian Bay linked with unconformities caused by at least six reductions in lake level. In ascending stratigraphic order, these lowstands occurred at about 11 200 BP, associated with the Kirkfield outlet from early Lake Algonquin; 10 200 – 9900 BP, associated with the post-Algonquin lake level fall; 9800 – 9050 BP, the most extreme lowstand, associated with the main Stanley – Hough draw down; and 7800 – 7450 BP. The concomitant highstands are Lake Algonquin, from about 11 200 – 10 200 BP; early Lake Mattawa, between 9600 and 9350 BP; the main Mattawa phase, 9050–7800 BP; and the Nipissing highstand, at about 4700 BP. Isotopic and paleoecological data show that all of the lowstands are characterized by cold, dilute, and isotopically very light (< −20‰) waters from the melting Laurentian ice cap. Highstands, on the other hand, are characterized by higher dissolved solid concentrations and a much smaller meltwater component. Oxygen isotope values of the waters in these lakes were −15 to −17‰ in Lake Algonquin, −13 to −14‰ for the early and middle Mattawa stages, −9 to −8‰ for the main Mattawa stage, and −7‰ for modern waters. This association of lowstands and not highstands with isotopically light waters is a new contribution to early Holocene hydrology of the Great Lakes. The Younger Dryas cool episode is coeval with the Lake Algonquin highstand and a younger cool episode is generally coeval with the Mattawa highstand. This supports the hypothesis of C.F.M. Lewis and T.W. Anderson that these large cold lakes were responsible for regional cooling during the early Holocene.


2008 ◽  
Vol 23 (5) ◽  
pp. 608-643 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth D. Adams ◽  
Ted Goebel ◽  
Kelly Graf ◽  
Geoffrey M. Smith ◽  
Anna J. Camp ◽  
...  

1995 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 279-285 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michel Magny

AbstractThe recent extension of (1) the residual Δ14C curve back to 11,400 cal yr B.P. and (2) the lake-level reconstruction in the Jura back to ca. 13,500 cal yr B.P. offers the opportunity of testing by proxy data the relationships between climate, atmospheric 14C, the sun, and the ocean recently suggested from the atmospheric 14C record. The climatic significance of the Jura record is supported by correlations with climatic oscillations reconstructed in the Alps from glaciers and timberline movements. Correspondence between the 14C and paleoclimatic record from the Jura suggests a working hypothesis: two intervals within the Holocene can be distinguished in the middle latitudes of western and central Europe. An early Holocene period shows abrupt climatic oscillations linked to ocean forcing. Major colder climate phases developed between ca. 9000 and 8800, and between ca. 8000 and 7000 cal yr B.C. that coincide with higher Δ14C values. After 6000 cal yr B.C., a second period is characterized by smoother multicentury climatic oscillations linked to solar forcing.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Jenifer A. Leidelmeijer ◽  
Matthew E.C. Kirby ◽  
Glen MacDonald ◽  
Joseph A. Carlin ◽  
Judith Avila ◽  
...  

Abstract Paleoperspectives of climate provide important information for understanding future climate, particularly in arid regions such as California, where water availability is uncertain from year to year. Here, we present a record from Barley Lake, California, focusing on the interval spanning the Younger Dryas (YD) to the early Holocene (EH), a period of acute and rapid global climate change. Twelve radiocarbon dates constrain the timing between 12.9 and 8.1 ka. We combine a variety of sediment analyses to infer changes in lake productivity, relative lake level, and runoff dynamics. In general, the lake is characterized by two states separated by a <200-year transition: (1) a variably deep, lower-productivity YD lake; and (2) a two-part variably shallow, higher-productivity EH lake. Inferred EH winter-precipitation runoff reveals dynamic multidecadal-to-centennial-scale variability, in agreement with the EH lake-level data. The Barley Lake archive captures both hemispheric and regional signals of climate change across the transition, suggesting a role for both ocean-atmosphere and insolation forcing. Our paleoperspective emphasizes California's sensitivity to climate change and how that change can generate abrupt shifts in limnological regimes.


2002 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 183-197 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michel Magny ◽  
Patrick Schoellammer

Abstract On the basis of a high-resolution (10 cm / 110 years) lacustrine sequence from Le Locle, Swiss Jura, a fine-scale pattern of palaeohydrological changes is reconstructed for the late Younger Dryas (YD) and the early to mid-Holocene period. The late YD is characterized by a general trend of a fall in lake level and a large climatic instability. The early to mid-Holocene period shows a quasi-cyclic pattern of lake-level fluctuations. Large drops in lake level occurred at ca. 11 600-10 200 cal. BP and ca. 8 900-7 700 cal. BP. Each was interrupted by a short-term rise in lake-level and followed by a longer phase of high lake level respectively at ca. 10 200-8 900 cal. BP and ca. 7 700-6 600 cal. BP. The high lake-level periods at le Locle appear to be in phase with cold spells reconstructed in central Europe, in eastern North America and in the Greenland ice-sheet, or with cooling events and salinity anomalies recorded in the North Atlantic zone. They also coincide with rising residual Δ14C values. These data and the Lateglacial oxygen-isotope GISP2 record suggest three successive quasi-cycles of climatic and environmental changes showing strong similarities in their internal structure. These cycles suggest that large-scale climate oscillations developing from the Bølling warming to the mid-Holocene could have been associated with changes in ocean ventilation probably induced by three deglaciation steps. Finally, as a working hypothesis, a re-exami- nation of the YD event is proposed from a Holocene point of view.


2004 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 181-192 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michel Magny ◽  
Carole Bégeot

Recent studies of lake-level fluctuations during the last deglaciation in eastern France (Jura Mountains and Pre-Alps) and on the Swiss Plateau show distinct phases of higher water level developing at the beginning and during the latter part of Greenland Stade 1 (i.e. Younger Dryas event) and punctuating the early Holocene period at 11,250–11,050, 10,300–10,000, 9550–9150, 8300–8050, and 7550–7250 cal yr B.P. The phases at 11,250–11,050 and 8300–8050 cal yr B.P. appear to be related to the cool Preboreal Oscillation and the 8200 yr event assumed to be associated with deglaciation events. A comparison of this mid-European lake-level record with the outbursts from proglacial Lake Agassiz in North America suggests that, between 13,000 and 8000 cal yr B.P. phases of positive water balance were the response in west-central Europe to climate cooling episodes, which were induced by perturbation of the thermohaline circulation due to sudden freshwater releases to oceans. This probably was in response to a southward migration of the Atlantic Westerly Jet and its associated cyclonic track. Moreover, it is hypothesized that, during the early Holocene, varying solar activity could have been a crucial factor by amplifying or reducing the possible effects of Lake Agassiz outbursts on the climate.


2007 ◽  
Vol 26 (15-16) ◽  
pp. 1951-1964 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michel Magny ◽  
Boris Vannière ◽  
Jacques-Louis de Beaulieu ◽  
Carole Bégeot ◽  
Oliver Heiri ◽  
...  

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